Be sure to carry a spare or two. Especially since a 2 micron is likely to clog relatively often.
I sell these things all day long and have to agree with what Ed says. Changing a fuel-water separator is (or should) be one of the quickest and easiest things you can do to improve or remedy engine-running issues. You'd be surprised (or maybe you wouldn't be) how naive most motorboaters are about basic practical matters like water separators. I can't count how many people seem to have no idea what this is good for; and motorboaters in general are not good with maintaining spares supplies (unless the supplies make the boat go faster or shine brighter).
I also like the idea of having a 10-micron and a 2-micron in series for a small diesel. BTW: in general, nothing over 10 micron will handle ethanol-blended gasoline. Mercruiser still sells 22-micron filters; I guess there are still non-ethanol markets out there somewhere.
Large diesel yachts (even some Cherubini 44s) get equipped with
TWO Racor filters in series, each fitted with a shutoff valve, so that even when the engine is running you can take one filter out of the line, drain the bowl and replace the element, put it back in line, and then change the other one. This is
not prohibitively expensive to do, especially when you do a lot of motoring in canals or the ICW, and it's especially valuable if you know you're the type that never fixes a leaky roof till it rains.
